Litcius/Paper detail

Promoting the adoption of climate-smart agricultural technologies among maize farmers in Ghana: using digital advisory services

Bright Owusu Asante, Wanglin Ma, Stephen Prah, Omphile Temoso

2024Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Although policy and advisory communities have promoted the use of digital advisory services (DAS) to stimulate technology adoption among smallholder farmers, little is known about whether DAS use encourages farmers to adopt climate-smart agricultural (CSA) technologies. This study addresses the gap by estimating data collected from 3197 maize-producing households in rural Ghana and considering three CSA technologies: row planting, zero tillage, and drought-tolerant seeds. A recursive bivariate probit model is utilized to mitigate selection bias issues. The results show that DAS use significantly increases the probabilities of adopting row planting, zero tillage, and drought-tolerant seeds by 12.4%, 4.2%, and 4.6%, respectively. Maize farmers’ decisions to use DAS are influenced by their age, gender, education, family size, asset value, distance to farm, perceived incidence of pest and disease, perceived drought stress, and membership in farmer-based organizations (FBO). Furthermore, the disaggregated analysis reveals that DAS use has a larger impact on the row planting adoption of female farmers than males.

Topics & Concepts

BusinessAgricultureClimate changeAgricultural economicsAgroforestryEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental scienceGeographyEconomicsEcologyBiologyArchaeologyAgricultural Innovations and PracticesMicrofinance and Financial InclusionCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts